ronan_d_john said:I thought that it was enough these days to show the cover of your passport showing the harp or whatever to quickly go thought these checks?
Might be the case if Ireland was a full participant in the but since we're not even EU passports should be checked.ronan_d_john said:I thought that it was enough these days to show the cover of your passport showing the harp or whatever to quickly go thought these checks?
Meccano said:I've waited over two hours at immigration gates in the US - and if anyone tried by-passing them they'd be shot dead.
I don't see how it is the fault of the civil service. Nor is it the fault of Ryan Air. It is an issue between the Gardai and the management of Dublin Airport.cuchulainn said:Dont agree with your assessment that Ryanair are the guilty party in the above fiasco. put the blame where it due, on the laps of our benchmarking seeking civil servants.
cuchulainn said:Dont agree with your assessment that Ryanair are the guilty party in the above fiasco. put the blame where it due, on the laps of our benchmarking seeking civil servants.
Well I never! It wouldn't have crossed my mind that this was their problem!ashambles said:The gardai are alleged to be unhappy at working alone in a single kiosk, where previously there were two gardai. Not for safety or practicality but due to the boredom factor.
delgirl said:It's peak season at Dublin Airport in July and August - everyone knows it, so why oh why didn't anyone tell the Garda Immigration services???
Last night on our return from holiday we witnessed near anarchy as more than 10 flights arrived simultaneously only to be met by 2 Garda Immigration officers - one checking the passports of non-EU nationals, who made up about half a percent of those travelling - and the other checking the EU, mainly Irish returning home, passports.
The queues extended way back to the arrival gates and we were packed in like sardines in a narrow corridor leading up to the immigration desks.
After waiting about half an hour with very little movement, frustration took hold and people began calling out from the back telling them to get a move on as the queue was getting longer. The Immigration Officers, recognising that passengers were becoming restless, called for assistance and two guards arrived which caused the situation to worsen as those waiting became even more vocal.
A few people then squeezed past the queue, straight past the other unmanned immigration desks and towards the baggage area. The immigration officer who was dealing with the non-EU passports quickly left her booth and apprehended them and an argument ensued. Their documents were checked and they were allowed to proceed.
Then some enterprising person reversed a travellator, originally running in the direction of the departure gates, on the other side of the partition wall forming the corridor where we were queuing so that people at the rear of the queue could get on it and totally bypass the immigration desks. The guards ran around the other side and stopped them and the situation escalated once again with much shouting and scuffling.
It was absolute chaos, with people shouting and children crying so eventually the immigration officer in the EU booth stopped checking each individual passport, as he's probably required to do, and allowed us all to proceed through just holding our passports open at the photo page.
The issue of Health and Safety was raised by a number of passengers with hundreds of people and small children crammed into a corridor with ever more people joining the queue behind and jostling to see what the hold up was at the front.
The level of disorganisation of the in this case was astounding and the risk to the wellbeing of the passengers was totally unacceptable. Hopefully some of those affected by the inept service will send written complaints to the GNIB.
Meccano said:Why should taxpayers pay for Immigration Services at DAP?
That means I'm subsidising people who go on flights!
They should stick a charge on the tickets to cover it.
Are you sure they don't already? I know there is a 'security charge' on most fares.
Anyhow - stop making me pay for YOUR holiday!
Big time. Dublin needs a second competing airport. Better still build a competing airport in the midlands. Or link Shannon/Cork airports to the rail network. That would help solve some of the congestion. Shannon is an underused airport with great facilities. Personally I avoid Dublin airport as much as I can. There should be no reason for anyone living in the midlands or west to have to go to Dublin airport at all.RonanC said:IMO Dublin Airport is a sub-standard airport and simply cannot cope with the amount of people who use it. Maybe Dublin needs a second airport (Baldonnel) to deal with budget airlines or short distance flights ??
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